What is market manipulation?
Market manipulation is the intentional act of inflating or deflating the price of an asset, creating artificial demand or supply, or otherwise distorting the natural price discovery process. These tactics can harm retail investors while benefiting those who use them.
However, the term "market manipulation" is sometimes confused with other related concepts, such as market making, market rigging and price manipulation. While these terms share certain similarities, they represent different aspects of market activity - some are legal and crucial for markets to work, while others are unethical or illegal.
What is market making?
Market making is a legitimate process where traders or institutions provide liquidity by simultaneously placing buy and sell orders for an asset. This helps stabilise markets and ensures smooth transactions. Unlike market manipulation, which distorts prices for unfair advantage, market making promotes transparency and efficiency in the trading process.
What is market rigging?
Market rigging is a specific type of market manipulation that often involves collusion or coordinated actions to fix prices, limit competition or manipulate market conditions for unfair advantage. Ultimately,all instances of market rigging are a type of market manipulation and are therefore illegal.
What is price manipulation?
Price manipulation is a subset of market manipulation and refers specifically to actions aimed at artificially changing the price of an asset. This includes creating false demand or suppressing supply to deceive investors into making decisions based on distorted information. Price manipulation is unethical and often illegal, as it distorts the natural price discovery process. However, there are certain instances where influencing prices is not considered illegal. These include regulated market-making activities, promotional pricing strategies or central bank interventions designed to stabilize markets.
Market manipulation: broad actions that distort the natural functioning of markets for unfair advantage
Market making: a legal process that enhances liquidity and stabilises markets by providing continuous buy and sell quotes
Market rigging: an illegal activity involving collusion to control market conditions unfairly
Price manipulation: a specific form of manipulation that targets an asset's price through artificial means
With a clearer understanding of the common terms related to market manipulation, let’s delve into the specific techniques used and how to identify them.
What is wash trading?
Wash trading is a deceptive trading practice where the same person or group buys and sells the same asset to create the illusion of high market activity. It’s used to trick other investors into thinking there is significant demand or supply for the asset.
A person (or group) places both buy and sell orders for the same asset at the same time to mimic real trading activity
These trades are typically executed between accounts controlled by the same party, creating a false sense of market demand or supply
This orchestrated activity misleads other investors into believing there is genuine market interest, prompting them to trade based on false data
Warning signs of wash trading
Unusual trading volumes: extremely high volumes without any corresponding market news or demand increase
Repetitive trade patterns: identical buy and sell orders for the same asset within short timeframes
Price stability amid high volume: high trading activity with no significant change in the asset's price
What is front-running?
Front-running is an unethical practice where someone with insider knowledge of a large, upcoming trade takes advantage by placing their own trades ahead of it. This allows them to profit from the predictable price movement caused by the larger trade.
A trader, broker or algorithm identifies a large order about to be placed in the market
The individual or system executes their trade first, knowing the large order will influence the price
Once the large order impacts the price, the front-runner sells or buys to capitalise on the expected market movement
Warning signs of front-running
Sudden, unexplained price movements: sharp price changes that occur just before a large order is executed
Unusual trading patterns: trades that appear to exploit insider knowledge or take advantage of market inefficiencies.
What are pump-and-dump schemes?
A pump-and-dump scheme is a type of fraud where manipulators artificially increase the price of an asset by spreading misleading information. Once the price is high enough, they sell their holdings, causing the price to collapse and leaving other investors with losses.
The schemers buy large amounts of a low-value asset
They spread false or exaggerated positive information to drive up demand
Once the price peaks they sell off their holdings, causing the price to crash
Warning signs of pump-and-dump schemes
Sudden, rapid price increases: unexplained spikes in price without any credible news or market developments to justify them
Unverified social media endorsements: prominent promotions or exaggerated claims shared on social media without reliable sources